i dont even like tyvolio as a ship but this was too funny not to draw
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i dont even like tyvolio as a ship but this was too funny not to draw
A few days ago I said that Benvolio and Tybalt are foils who, at their very cores, just want the same thing, AND NOW IT’S TIME TO GET INTO THAT!!
Benvolio’s name means “good-will” or “peacemaker.” This is his purpose: in a world shaped by senseless violence, he is the one who tries to end it with its impassionate opposite, peace. His opening lines, the audience’s introduction to him and Shakespeare’s one chance to properly arrange such a meeting, are him quite literally trying to stop Sampson and Gregory and Abraham from fighting.
Tybalt’s means “brave people,” and while Benvolio is brave, bravery commonly alludes to some sort of fighting—and that is just what Tybalt does. He, as Mercutio points out, is a trained fencer who learned to duel at the finest schools possible.
In their first scene together, the opening scene of the play, Tybalt comes in and sees Benvolio with his sword drawn, and immediately takes it as an invitation to fight him. He tells Benvolio how he hates him and his whole family as he hates hell, and their fight begins. Benvolio, who is not a skilled fighter and, other than this scene, never lifts his sword but, in some productions, to aid Romeo in trying to part Mercutio and Tybalt in their fight, or to point the blade at his own breast during his final monologue. He also loses his battle against Tybalt, and is wounded before the prince can stop the mass brawl. In the production I saw over the summer, he stupidly grabbed Tybalt’s sword, giving Tybalt the opportunity to pull it away, slicing Benvolio’s palm. Whenever Benvolio tries to end a fight with reason and bargaining, Tybalt is there to feed the flames.
Neither talk very much, and when they do, it is to their own purposes. Benvolio spends the entire play stopping brawls, defending himself and his loved ones to the adults, talking Romeo off the ledge, and reasoning with Mercutio and Tybalt, begging for the passionate and overly-emotional characters he surrounds himself with to see sense. Tybalt spends the two days of his life that we get to see starting fights he can claim he had no hand in beginning, challenging Benvolio’s friends to duels, and walking around behind a facade of bloodthirsty rage.
Then, in their final scripted appearances, they switch roles momentarily: Tybalt fights Romeo, yes, but he doesn’t get a final monologue, or even any proper last words. It’s not that he goes down without a fight, but in his final moments, he loses the upper hand, to the point where he can’t even get a word out before he is slain. Benvolio’s final words, meanwhile, are more violent than anything he spoke before: “This is the truth, or let Benvolio die.” But still, the only victim of this threat, this death wish, is himself.
They are still very similar, though. Neither are master wordsmiths, as Mercutio is, but they are still good with them nonetheless, and in the same way. Benvolio’s two monologues are him explaining the events of bloody civil brawls to the adults of the play, going over every detail and leaving nothing out, never once being punished himself. Tybalt, as mentioned before, hunts for clauses in his opponent’s speech, so he can convince himself and anyone who asks that he did not start a single fight, manipulating the truth but never once concealing or completely altering it.
They are also both the opposite of what their uncles want them to be. Benvolio is diplomatic, honest, obedient, and loyal. He’s bad with a sword and can’t even lie to Lord Montague about why he gets involved in the fights he does end up in. He will never fully become the man his uncle wishes him to be. However, that doesn’t mean he’s immune to his world’s violent influences. He still follows Romeo and Mercutio in their mischief, sneaking into the masque and mocking the nurse, and gets into an entire argument with Mercutio about whether or not he’s argumentative. He is not physically violent, but he is not immune to anger, either.
Tybalt, meanwhile, tries so hard to be the man Lord Capulet wants him to be, picking fights, sending out challenges, demanding Montague blood, and thus, is an embarrassment to his uncle. Lord Capulet is as bloodthirsty as Lord Montague, yes, and he is so aggressive that he has given Tybalt the wrong idea, that he can just act upon his violent urges whenever he pleases (Lord Capulet is, of course, a hypocrite).
Benvolio and Tybalt, at the end of the day, want the same things: to be seen, to be heard, and to stop having to fight.
Benvolio: Wow, Tybalt, you want to hold my hand before marriage? How awfully lewd of you.
Tybalt: We literally slept together yesterday.
Benvolio: That's NOTHING compared to the lewdness of holding hands.
Getting a little bit too obsessed with tyvolio like I bloody need new fics about these pairings that actually written well
Like pleaseee I need it
One of the best parts of headcanoning Tyvolio childhood friends is interpreting Tybalt's “This, by his voice, should be a Montague" line from Act I Scene V at the Capulet feast as him recognizing the Montagues' intonation and manner of speaking instead of Romeo's voice specifically. And Tybalt is only familiar with this speech pattern due to his childhood friendship with Benvolio, unaware the latter is a Montague until their families tore them apart and further conditioned him against Benvolio and his family. The Capulets probably then drilled the Montagues' crest, clothing colors, and manner of speech into Tybalt's mind to prevent him from making the same "mistake" again, when all he desired was a genuine connection, which he possessed for a fleeting moment before he was taught to despise it.
Perhaps Tybalt clung onto life long enough after his and Romeo's duel to hear "Why dost thou stay?" in that familiar voice and intonation, wanting more than anything to reply, "I wish I had" before he surrenders to death.
Tyvolio HCs
I hc that Benvolio is the only one who regularly visits Tybalt's grave after he died. They were friends when they were younger, and even though they've grown apart Benvolio still really cares about Tybalt and probably keeps a matching bracelet (Tybalt has the other one) that was gifted to him as a kid. It's too small for his wrist now so he wear it on his belt or in his hair. Tybalt never got rid of the bracelet and wore it on his belt (whenever people ask him what it's for he ssys it's just a gift from another Capulet). Since Benvolio wasn't allowed to go to the funeral he doesn't know if Tybalt's bracelet is buried with him or if another Capulet has it now.
hear me out guys: Trans Benvolio who's Juliet’s childhood friend pre transition. So Tybalt sees this really pretty girl hanging out with his cousin all the time but she seems shy so he doesn't say anything...and then years later he dies and the last thing he realizes is that that annoyingly pretty boy he'd hated was the same person from his childhood...and he never got to say anything :)
hmmm since none of my friends use this that i know of i can say what i want....
....Tybalt Capulet is my biggest hear me out.